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Full Discussion: array dynamic allocation
Top Forums Programming array dynamic allocation Post 302301198 by littleboyblu on Thursday 26th of March 2009 06:39:57 AM
Old 03-26-2009
array dynamic allocation

Hi,
I have the following problem: i must allocate a dynamic array from a subroutine which should return such array to main function. The subroutine has already a return parameter so i thought of pass the array as I/O parameter. I tried the following program but it doesn't work (segmentation fault), i think because i should have a pointer to array, but i'm not sure.

Code:
void main(){
int *array;
int **ptr = &array;
sub(ptr);
}

void sub(int **ptr){
....//calculates the array dimension
*ptr = calloc(n,sizeof(int));
for(i=0;i<n;i++)*ptr[i]=i;
}


Last edited by littleboyblu; 03-26-2009 at 10:33 AM..
 

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scandir(3C)															       scandir(3C)

NAME
scandir(), alphasort() - scan a directory SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
reads the directory dirname and builds an array of pointers to directory entries using (see malloc(3C)). It returns the number of entries in the array and a pointer to the array through namelist. The select parameter is a pointer to a user-supplied subroutine which is called by to select which entries are to be included in the array. The select routine is passed a pointer to a directory entry and should return a non-zero value if the directory entry is to be included in the array. If select is null, then all the directory entries will be included. The compar parameter is a pointer to a user-supplied subroutine which is passed to qsort(3C) to sort the completed array. If this pointer is null, the array is not sorted. is a routine which can be used for the compar parameter to sort the array alphabetically. EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Locale The category determines the collation ordering used by The category determines the interpretation of bytes in the file name portion of directory entries as single- and/or multi-byte characters by the function. Results are undefined if the locales specified by the and categories use different code sets. International Code Set Support Single- and multi-byte character code sets are supported for RETURN VALUE
If successful, returns the number of directory entries selected, and through the namelist parameter returns a pointer to the array. returns -1, if the directory cannot be opened for reading or cannot allocate enough memory to hold all the data structures. APPLICATION USAGE
uses to allocate memory for the array associated with the namelist pointer. If the return value of is greater than or equal to zero(0), memory allocated for the namelist pointer needs to be freed by the application using (see malloc(3C)) by first freeing each pointer in the array followed by the array itself. EXAMPLES
The example program below scans the directory. It does not exclude any entries since select is NULL. The contents of are sorted by It prints out how many entries are in and the sorted entries of the directory. The memory used by is returned using #include <sys/types.h> #include <stdio.h> #include <dirent.h> extern int scandir(); extern int alphasort(); main() { int num_entries, i; struct dirent **namelist, **list; if ((num_entries = scandir("/tmp", &namelist, NULL, alphasort)) < 0) { fprintf(stderr, "Unexpected error "); exit(1); } printf("Number of entries is %d ", num_entries); if (num_entries) { printf("Entries are:"); for (i=0, list=namelist; i<num_entries; i++) { printf(" %s", (*list)->d_name); free(*list); list++; } } free(namelist); printf(" "); exit(0); } WARNINGS
For 32-bit applications, the d_ino field of the struct returned by or may overflow for filesystems that use 64-bit values. In this case the most-significant bytes will be truncated without generating an error and d_ino values may not be unique. SEE ALSO
directory(3C), malloc(3C), qsort(3C), string(3C), dirent(5), thread_safety(5). scandir(3C)
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